1 / 19

South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium (Agency H53)

The South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium (AHEC) connects students and professionals with the tools, training, and resources necessary to provide quality healthcare, focusing on primary care in rural and underserved communities.

kevinbest
Télécharger la présentation

South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium (Agency H53)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium (Agency H53) Ways & Means Healthcare Budget Subcommittee January 29, 2019

  2. Accountability Report Highlights The South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium is its own state agency. The AHEC budget is separate from MUSC, however all administrative and financial activities are conducted within the MUSC system. Consequently, the Accountability Report from MUSC includes information about the South Carolina AHEC.

  3. Requests South Carolina AHEC has no: Proviso requests Capital budget requests Non-recurring budget requests

  4. Three Year Funding *Funds carried forward from prior year **Expenditures include $1,955,718 transferred from Palmetto Health and expended for the SC DHHS Teaching Supplement

  5. South Carolina AHEC 4 regional centers serve the entire state 1 program office housed at MUSC

  6. What We Do The South Carolina AHEC connects students and professionals with the tools, training and resources necessary to provide quality healthcare, with a focus on primary care in rural and underserved communities. We provide education, recruitment and retention programs to build and support the healthcare workforce South Carolina needs.

  7. Program Areas Continuing Professional Development Provides education for health care professionals to enhance their clinical skills and maintain licensure Health Careers Pipeline Programs Prepare underrepresented students for academic success and entry into health professions programs Health Professions Student Programs Facilitate health professions student training placements in rural and underserved communities Telehealth Education Educates students and heath care professionals about emerging trends in telehealth and technology Graduate Medical Education Supports high-quality family medicine residency training in South Carolina SC Office for Healthcare Workforce Analyzes and provides information about the health care workforce in South Carolina. Learn more at www.scohw.org Recruitment & Retention Programs Offer financial incentives to clinicians who want to practice in rural and underserved communities

  8. Statewide Collaborations South Carolina AHEC partners with: 29 16 34 State-Funded & Statewide Organizations Middle and High Schools Institutions of Higher Education 379 204 115+ Health Professions Preceptors Community-Based Training Sites Healthcare Partners & Organizations

  9. Rural Success Stories Dr. Holly Munson FY18 Incentive Grant Recipient Practicing in Walhalla Seneca Family Medicine Residency Program Graduate The Rural Physician Incentive Grant Program has been an incredible blessing for me and my career as a family medicine physician. After the great accomplishment of graduating from residency I was still faced with an extensive amount of debt that accumulated from attending a private medical school. I knew that I wanted to stay and practice locally, near my residency, but unfortunately student loan repayment was not an option in the position I desperately wanted. Thanks to the Rural Physician Incentive Grant Program, I felt confident in accepting a position in an underserved area of South Carolina. I knew that the money from the grant would present an excellent way for me to continue paying off my medical school debt and still serve the community by filling the role of a much needed primary care physician. Without this grant, I may have had to pursue my career elsewhere, however, now I am blessed to be able to continue to do what I love, full scope family medicine. 

  10. Recurring Budget RequestsAgency Priority #1 Rural Physician Program Amount: $250,000

  11. Program Update Additional recurring funds allocated in FY17-18: $167,287 FY 19 FY 17 FY 18 Total: 12 Advanced Practice Providers: 5 Physicians: 7 Total: 21 Advanced Practice Providers: 12 Physicians: 9 Total: 27* Advanced Practice Providers: 11 Physicians: 16 *Some contracts pending

  12. Rural Physician Program Initiated in 1989 by South Carolina Legislature SC Code of Laws, Section 59-123-125 Incentive grants for physicians & advanced practice providers to practice in rural & medically underserved communities Current funding: $667,287

  13. 2016 South Carolina Health Professions Data Book, South Carolina Office for Healthcare Workforce. www.scohw.org

  14. Physician Workforce in SC Physician Workforce per 100,000 in Metropolitan/Micropolitan/Non-Metro (Rural) Areas Non-Metro Counties: Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell, Chesterfield, Clarendon, Colleton, Dillon, Hampton, Lee, Marion, McCormick, Williamsburg South Carolina Office for Healthcare Workforce. (September 2017). Changes in the Established Physician Workforce in South Carolina: 2009 - 2015. www.scohw.org

  15. Filling the Gaps 7 4 3 2 43 Providers Funded for Counties of Greatest Need Incentive grant recipients funded FY13-19 (Physicians and AP Providers) 5 4 2 5 6 5

  16. SC Clinicians Turned Away • More eligible providers than available funds • Additional funding will go directly to additional clinicians Unable to fund since FY17 Total: 102 Advanced Practice Providers: 72 Physicians: 30

  17. Return on Investment Return on Investment: 1 1 $1 Physician in South Carolina Physician in South Carolina Invested in Primary Care = = = $76,118 11.9 $13 Jobs Supported2 State and local tax revenue generated2 Savings in Downstream Costs1 1Delivering value in healthcare starts with increased primary care investment. Medical Economics, August 6, 2018: http://www.medicaleconomics.com/health-law-and-policy/delivering-value-healthcare-starts-increased-primary-care-investment 2The national economic impact of physicians. Prepared for The American Medical Association by IQVIA. Retrieved 12/4/18 from https://www.ama-assn.org/sites/ama-assn.org/files/corp/media-browser/public/2018-ama-economic-impact-study.pdf

  18. Program Outcomes 87% 72% 88 451 Physicians Advanced Practice Providers Advanced Practice Providers Physicians Received rural practice grants from the rural physician program since its inception Rural incentive grant recipients still practicing in South Carolina* *Contract completers initially funded 1995-2014 based on active license in 2015-2016. Source: SC Office for Healthcare Workforce.

  19. Rural Success Stories Dr. Kyle Gehres FY16 Incentive Grant Recipient Practicing in Dillon McLeod Family Medicine Residency Program Graduate Practicing in rural South Carolina exposes me to some very ill patients with limited financial resources. These are people in need. With few specialists available, this community allows me to practice family medicine in the fullest sense . . . When I was looking around for a job, I had several practices in mind. I happened to really like everything about this one rural practice. With the Incentive Grant Program, it made it that much easier to choose my current employer . . . I am very impressed with this Incentive Grant program.  There are very few places in the country that offer such a great incentive to work in an underserved community.  

More Related